sarcastor said:here are some caramel banana crepes. the pictures did not come out that well
http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs263.snc1/9023_149579037741_673082741_2765194_7749362_n.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]
did you get that plate at Ikea?
Oh man, that looks amazing.Yes Boss! said:Whoa, wth at the "pussy" girls. Does that name not have as bad of connotations in europe as it does here in the US?
I'm cooking nothing but Dal dishes for the next two weeks for fun.
First up is Palak Dal. Toor Dal with a ton of fresh spinach, a couple of tomatoes and onions, ton of rough-chopped garlic, fresh curry leaves, the usual base spices, about a half-dozen chopped green chilis and a bit of butter at the end to smooth it all out.
fireside said:Fajitas on homemade flour tortillas.
Homemade flour tortillas are the fucking BEST! God, I love them so. One trick my mom used to do when we were kids was to butter the last two tortillas and leave them on the griddle while it was cooling down. They'd get all crunchy and the butter would soak into the tortilla and make it DAMN tasty.fireside said:Fajitas on homemade flour tortillas.
[img ]http://i38.tinypic.com/o0dpih.jpg[/img]
I love to deep fry them and then coat them in cinnamon sugar. Didn't have enough to do that this time though.Schrade said:Homemade flour tortillas are the fucking BEST! God, I love them so. One trick my mom used to do when we were kids was to butter the last two tortillas and leave them on the griddle while it was cooling down. They'd get all crunchy and the butter would soak into the tortilla and make it DAMN tasty.
One of these days I need to make some tortillas.
My mom called those sopapillas when I was a kid. Yeah, here's a wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sopaipillafireside said:I love to deep fry them and then coat them in cinnamon sugar. Didn't have enough to do that this time though.
This is the recipe I used to make them.
Cool Do you get drunk off that cake?Jill Sandwich said:I made a vodka strawberries and cream cake!
I steeped sliced strawberries in Russian Standard vodka overnight, then sliced the cake twice and arranged the strawberries in both layers. I puréed four of the strawberries and mixed that into the whipped cream, along with some of the vodka syrup. Decorated with mini Chupa-Chups and sprinkles. Nom nom nom. (It was too tall for my cake tins!)
WTF did I just watch? That's creepy.Jill Sandwich said:
I haven't seen see a Coke can in that style since the early-to-mid 90's. :lolJill Sandwich said:
numble said:IronGAF, what are some good Chinese recipes that don't involve seafood?
Zyzyxxz said:theres so muc
If you can buy a claypot rice then I recommend trying this:
You need access to a real asian supermarket though since it requires dried and preserved meats which the Asian and International food aisles normally don't stock.
Zyzyxxz said:theres so muc
If you can buy a claypot rice then I recommend trying this:
You need access to a real asian supermarket though since it requires dried and preserved meats which the Asian and International food aisles normally don't stock.
Zyzyxxz said:theres so muc
If you can buy a claypot rice then I recommend trying this:
http://www.myasiankitchenny.com/2009/04/braised-chinatown-soy-sauce-chicken.htmlnumble said:IronGAF, what are some good Chinese recipes that don't involve seafood?
OnkelC said:Here's the new kitchen-to-be, still BETA:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qx8TNmtyRcA
OnkelC said:Here's the new kitchen-to-be, still BETA:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qx8TNmtyRcA
SRG01 said:You don't need a claypot to make this. I've made it several times using a rice steamer.
numble said:How is that made? I'm within walking distance to NYC's Chinatown, so it shouldn't be a problem (claypot or meats).
Basically it goes down like this:
1)wash rice, drain, cover with water again, I usually do 1 cup rice with 1-1.25 cups of water.
2) set heat to high, once water begins to boiling and while the rice is still hard, take a spoon and mix around the rice so the bottom and top rice get evenly distributed, this ensures that the bottom rice won't burn into a black crisp
3) after doing that set to medium heat for a few minutes to get the water boiling again while avoiding burning the bottom.
4) after a few minutes the water level should be even with the rice or mostly absorbed, at this point you add your meat/veggies
5) after adding toppings set to low heat and you can take it easy from here on out, usually heat it up on my powerful burner and then transfer to low on my least powerful burner. Probably 10 minutes on Low to get the rice soft and the meat cooked.
Zyzyxxz said:but you don't get the crispy rice!.
I'll try this one day. What's the pronunciation for Chinese duck prosciutto?Zyzyxxz said:but you don't get the crispy rice!.
quoting myself from page 95.
Now your toppings of meats, you can use chinese sausage (lap chang), chinese bacon (lap yeuk), and Chinese duck prosciutto those are my favorite toppings.
numble said:I'll try this one day. What's the pronunciation for Chinese duck prosciutto?
OnkelC said:Here's the new kitchen-to-be, still BETA:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qx8TNmtyRcA
OnkelC said:nice pie, thanks for sharing. What's a pie bird?
A pie bird, pie vent, pie whistle, pie funnel, or pie chimney is a hollow ceramic device, traditionally from Europe and shaped like a bird. Pie birds are steam vents that have been placed in the center of fruit and meat pies (while cooking) since Victorian Times although some historians claim a much earlier provenance, e.g. the 1500s.
OnkelC said:Thanks again. I have never seen a pie bird in use so far, funny it's supposed to originate from Europe.
Zyzyxxz said:there was a type in my previous post, it should be laap and not lap (so you dont pronounce it wrong)
Anyway the duck is called laap ngaap (might be hard to say but just ask for salted ducked or some kind of duck and it should look like this:
sometimes you can buy the whole duck or just the legs, I would recommend just the legs if its your first time trying it. Also go easy on the dark soy sauce (traditional sauce for claypot rice) since the salted duck is well... salty.
luoapp said:That, and the pork and duck fat can't be melted enough due to the lower temperature in a rice steamer. You have to have the right tool to do the job right.
CrystalGemini said:Made some spinach, avocado turkey burgers for dinner tonight. Seasoned with Worcestershire sauce, basil, dill, salt, pepper, bread, milk and an egg. Topped with medium cheddar and a creamy Dijon sauce.
Sorta looks like Ying Yeung Faan. But it is hard to tell since I can't see the other side.Zyzyxxz said:whoa what is that? I've never seen that at dim sum restaurants before
Zyzyxxz said:whoa what is that? I've never seen that at dim sum restaurants before
kassatsu said:Sorta looks like Ying Yeung Faan. But it is hard to tell since I can't see the other side.
x9000 WTF.Zaptruder said:The fuck? Everything that you do and post about had most of us fooled that you were some middle eastern/indian region kinda dude.
beelzebozo said:that's awesome! was this the first time you've made your own dough? how did it turn out?
i have to say that my initial experiences trying to make pizza and all the problems i had largely centered around developing, working, and shaping the dough. your pizza looks delicious though. what kind of cheese did you use?
I could go for some of that right now.RbBrdMan said:Look, look I made a pizza last night. From scratch. Well I used canned sauce. But everything else was homemade.
It's not as awesome as some of the 5 star delights I've seen in this thread but I was proud of myself.